The construction of a complex, 3D optical metamaterial challenges conventional nanofabrication techniques. These metamaterials require patterning of both a deformable mechanical substrate and an optically-active structure with ∼200 nm resolution and precision. The soft nature of the deformable mechanical materials often precludes the use of resist-based techniques for patterning. Furthermore, FIB deposition approaches produce metallic structures with considerable disorder and impurities, impairing their optical response. In this paper we discuss a novel solution to this nanofabrication challenge-the integration of direct laser writing and MEMS stencil patterning. We demonstrate a variety of methods that enable this integration and then show how one can produce optically-active, 3D metamaterials. We present optical characterization data on one of these metamaterials to demonstrate the viability of our nanofabrication approach.
CITATION STYLE
Reeves, J. B., Jayne, R. K., Barrett, L., White, A. E., & Bishop, D. J. (2019). Fabrication of multi-material 3D structures by the integration of direct laser writing and MEMS stencil patterning. Nanoscale, 11(7), 3268–3274. https://doi.org/10.1039/c8nr09174a
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